Racketeering is no longer a tool to merely hunt mobsters. Among those currently facing claims of carrying on a pattern of illegal activities are Megaupload founder Kim Dotcom , the financiers behind The Wolf of Wall Street and a certain presidential candidate who once promised to share secrets about getting rich in the real estate industry.
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... of Wikileaks' plans for Clinton White House ambitions appears to have come from an unlikely source. The 6'7" Kim Dotcom was born Kim Schmitz in West Germany. By 2005, he had been arrested multiple times when he legally changed his surname to ...
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... to subscribe and wait for a new Facebook message from the TC Messenger news bot. More than four years later, Kim Dotcom's legal battles (at least in New Zealand) may be close to an end. His final appeal to avoid extradition to face charges in the ...
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The protracted battle to have Megaupload founder Kim Dotcom face video piracy charges in the United States broke new ground on Wednesday with live-streaming of his appeal against extradition. Megaupload founder Kim Dotcom leaves with his girlfriend Elizabeth Donelly following his extradition appeal at the High Court in Auckland, on August 29, 2016 Dotcom won approval to live-stream his bid to avoid leaving New Zealand after successfully arguing that global interest required more than standard brief television clips.
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Kim Dotcom accompanied by his girlfriend Elizabeth Donnelly appears in New Zealand's High Court in Auckland, New Zealand. Picture: Dave Rowland/Getty Images IF THERE'S one thing that has come to define Kim Dotcom more than his computer skills and incredibly ostentatious lifestyle, it's his defiance.
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The protracted battle to have Megaupload founder Kim Dotcom face video piracy charges in the United States broke new ground on Wednesday with live-streaming of his appeal against extradition. Dotcom won approval to live-stream his bid to avoid leaving New Zealand after successfully arguing that global interest required more than standard brief television clips.
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Kim Dotcom's latest legal battle started streaming live on YouTube on Wednesday as the Megaupload founder, along with three co-defendants associated with the now-defunct file-storage site, fight extradition to the U.S. from New Zealand. Dotcom, Bram Van der Kolk, Fin Batato, and Mathias Ortmann face U.S. charges of copyright infringement, money laundering, and racketeering in connection with online site Megaupload, which the American authorities closed down in 2012, seven years after it was founded.
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Internet mogul Kim Dotcom, who's wanted in the U.S. on criminal charges, has won permission for his court battle to be streamed online. Dotcom is fighting extradition from New Zealand to the U.S., where he's accused of reproducing and distributing copyrighted content on a massive scale.
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A New Zealand judge gave permission on Tuesday for the hearing of German tech entrepreneur Kim Dotcom's appeal against his extradition to be streamed on YouTube, making it the country's first court case to be broadcast on the Internet. The six-week hearing opened in Auckland this week, nine months after a lower court ruled Kim Dotcom could be sent to the United States to face copyright infringement and money-laundering charges over the filesharing website Megaupload.
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Internet entrepreneur Kim Dotcom, seen a July photo, has won the right to film and livestream his extradition appeal, which began Monday, Aug. 29, 2016, at New Zealand's High Court in Auckland. Internet mogul Kim Dotcom addresses journalists after a judge ruled that he and three other defendants are eligible for extradition to the US, outside the court in Auckland on December 23, 2015.
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Kim Dotcom allowed to livestream appeal against extradition to U.S. It will be the first court case in New Zealand to be broadcast online. Check out this story on USATODAY.com: http://usat.ly/2bO9ZmJ Internet entrepreneur Kim Dotcom can livestream his appeal against extradition to the United States online, a judge in New Zealand ruled Tuesday.
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Accused internet pirate Kim Dotcom wins bid to livestream his legal fight to avoid extradition from New Zealand to the US where he faces decades in jail Internet entrepreneur Kim Dotcom will be allowed to livestream his legal bid to halt his extradition to the United States, a New Zealand judge ruled on Tuesday. Dotcom and three of his colleagues are appealing a December lower-court decision allowing them to be extradited to the US to face conspiracy, racketeering and money-laundering charges.
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The six-week hearing opened in Auckland this week, nine months after a lower court ruled Kim Dotcom could be sent to the United States to face copyright infringement and money-laundering charges over the filesharing website Megaupload. The case has been closely watched by the media industry and developers in the file-sharing business for signs of how far the United States is willing to go to protect US copyright holders.
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... an additional 1,000 people at its Hollyhill campus in Cork over the next 18 months. 9. Internet entrepreneur Kim Dotcom will be allowed to stream his appeal against extradition live online. The founder of the seized Megaupload websites is wanted in ...
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Kim Dotcom, the founder of controversial file-storage website Megaupload, has won the right to live-stream his extradition appeal from a court in New Zealand. The German-born internet entrepreneur, real name Kim Schmitz, faces U.S. charges of copyright infringement, money laundering, and racketeering in connection with Megaupload, which the American authorities shuttered in 2012.
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A New Zealand judge has ruled that Internet entrepreneur Kim Dotcom can livestream an upcoming court hearing on his appeal against his extradition to the United States, where he is facing criminal charges related to online piracy. Justice Murray Gilbert agreed with Dotcom's request Tuesday, rejecting U.S. arguments that it could taint a potential jury pool if he is brought to trial.
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... highest level since the survey started five years ago. A New Zealand judge has ruled that internet entrepreneur Kim Dotcom will be allowed to stream his appeal against extradition live online. Dotcom, the founder of the seized Megaupload websites, ...
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